When we listen in on one-sided telephone conversations in the movies, often the behavior is not quite human. Rather, it becomes an actor's showcase for histrionic tears or smiling through tears — a good old-fashioned wallow in capital-O Overacting. This can be fun, of course. But there are no capital letters to be found in the performances guiding "Two Days, One Night," the latest compelling examination of the human condition and how we treat one another from the sterling filmmaking team of Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne. Marion Cotillard, the first major international star the Dardenne brothers have placed at the center of a project, plays Sandra, a solar panel...

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When we listen in on one-sided telephone conversations in the movies, often the behavior is not quite human. Rather, it becomes an actor's showcase for histrionic tears or smiling through tears — a good old-fashioned wallow in capital-O Overacting.
...

As both a producer and a director, Stanley Kramer was fearless.
As a scrappy young independent producer in the late 1940s, he bought the rights to Arthur Laurents' "Home of the Brave," the hit 1946 Broadway play which exposed anti-Semitism in...

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